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According to John A. Skinner's story, Beaver Adz came running down the public road to town to get "whites" to go up and stop the fight. Skinner said Beaver Adz was an old coward and did not want any fighting. This was before he lost his eyesight. John Fotheringham told about the men bringing old Pahshaunts to town and laying him on a table in a log cabin which stood toward the SE corner of the Co-op Store lot. It took three men to hold him down while the fourth man took the arrow out of his hip. Fotheringham said, "People all over town could hear old Pahshaunts yell."
James E. Hoopes and several of his companions were requested to go up to the battle ground and bury the dead Indians. Leading men of the town tried first to get the Indians to bury their own dead. But "not much," no one could persuade an Indian to go near the corpses. The "old timers" said the tribe never camped there again.
James Hoopes told, in his jovial manner, of throwing picks and shovels on a wagon and taking two long poles and making their way up the public road which passed old "Daddy" Andrews' home, now the property of William Baldwin, then on east through the fields to the Spanish Trail Hollow, to the battleground. Hoopes said the corpses had been exposed to the warm weather, and he was glad that a stiff breeze was blowing in the opposite direction. When the graves were dug, the bodies were pushed in with long poles and covered with dirt. In talking with Charles D. White, he stated that "Fat Dad" was a good Indian and that it was a shame he was killed. Had it been Sissix or Pahshaunts, the town, as well as the other Indians would have been benefitted.
BEAVER ADZ APPOINTED CHIEF
According to John A. Skinner's story, not long after the war on Jackson County Hill, John R. Murdock and a number of leading men met together and discussed the

According to John A. Skinner's story, Beaver Adz came running down the public road to town to get "whites" to go up and stop the fight. Skinner said Beaver Adz was an old coward and did not want any fighting. This was before he lost his eyesight. John Fotheringham told about the men bringing old Pahshaunts to town and laying him on a table in a log cabin which stood toward the SE corner of the Co-op Store lot. It took three men to hold him down while the fourth man took the arrow out of his hip. Fotheringham said, "People all over town could hear old Pahshaunts yell."
James E. Hoopes and several of his companions were requested to go up to the battle ground and bury the dead Indians. Leading men of the town tried first to get the Indians to bury their own dead. But "not much," no one could persuade an Indian to go near the corpses. The "old timers" said the tribe never camped there again.
James Hoopes told, in his jovial manner, of throwing picks and shovels on a wagon and taking two long poles and making their way up the public road which passed old "Daddy" Andrews' home, now the property of William Baldwin, then on east through the fields to the Spanish Trail Hollow, to the battleground. Hoopes said the corpses had been exposed to the warm weather, and he was glad that a stiff breeze was blowing in the opposite direction. When the graves were dug, the bodies were pushed in with long poles and covered with dirt. In talking with Charles D. White, he stated that "Fat Dad" was a good Indian and that it was a shame he was killed. Had it been Sissix or Pahshaunts, the town, as well as the other Indians would have been benefitted.
BEAVER ADZ APPOINTED CHIEF
According to John A. Skinner's story, not long after the war on Jackson County Hill, John R. Murdock and a number of leading men met together and discussed the